Backplane for an array of emissive elements

ABSTRACT

A plurality of pixel drive circuits form part of an array of emissive elements. The plurality of pixel drive circuits are disposed to form a plurality of rows and a plurality of columns. The plurality of pixel drive circuits are organized into sets of pixel drive circuits, and each set comprises at least one pixel drive circuit. A FET of a set of pixel drive circuits shares a common well with other FETs of similar function in the same set of pixel drive circuits positioned therein, such that the variance of the threshold voltages of those FETs is substantially reduced. Each of the pixel drive circuits comprises a circuit operative to deliver a current at a predetermined voltage to an emissive device and a memory circuit operative to receive modulation data and to use same to modulate the current output of the pixel drive circuit.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/914,593, filed on Jun. 29, 2020, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/868,054, filed on Jun. 28, 2019.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the design of a backplane useful to drive an array of pixels comprising emissive elements at each pixel and to an emissive array fabricated with such a backplane. More particularly, the present invention relates to a backplane designed such that it can drive an array of micro emissive pixel elements with high current.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Emissive displays have proved useful for a variety of applications. For example, plasma display panels (PDPs) were at one time the leading flat panel display technology. More recently, applications that are not display oriented have been postulated, including use as a pixilated emissive device in an additive manufacturing device and use as a component within a vehicular illumination system for automotive applications.

More recently, emissive display system developers have demonstrated emissive displays based on backplanes driving small LEDs with a pitch between adjacent pixels of 17 micrometers (hereafter microns or μm) or less. For applications requiring higher brightness the small LEDs may be made larger although still small—on the order of 40 to 50 microns. The sizes stated are not limiting on this specification. These small LEDs are commonly termed microLEDs or μLEDs. LEDs take advantage of the band gap characteristic of semiconductors in which use of a suitable voltage to drive the LED will cause electrons within the LED to combine with electron holes, resulting in the release of energy in the form of photons, a feature referred to as electroluminescence. Those of skill in the art will recognize that semiconductors suitable for LED components may include trace amounts of dopant material to facilitate the formation of electron holes. Organic light emitting diodes or OLEDs are another example of a class of emissive devices.

The choice of semiconductor materials to form an LED will vary by application. In some applications for visual displays one monochrome color may be desirable, resulting in the use of a single semiconductor material for the LEDs of all pixels. Some LEDs provide white light by using blue light to illuminate a phosphor material suitable to provide green and red light, which, combined with the blue light, is perceived as white in color. In other applications, a full range of colors may be required, which will result in a requirement for three or more semiconductor materials configured to radiate, for example, red, green and blue or combinations thereof. An illumination system based on LEDs may be applied to use in a variety of applications, including motor vehicle lights and head lamps. In the case of additive manufacturing, a semiconductor material may be selected such that it emits radiation at a wavelength that acts as actinic radiation on a material used in an additive manufacturing process.

All potential variations are included within the scope of the present invention.

SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION

The present invention pertains to a backplane comprising pixel drive circuits operative to deliver a modulated high current to a plurality of emissive elements mounted thereon. More particularly, it pertains to a backplane suitable for use as part of a headlamp illumination system that provides selection mechanisms that enable selection of best brightness matches among the plurality of emissive elements.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1A presents a block diagram of a backplane suitable to drive an array of emissive elements.

FIG. 1B presents a block diagram of a controller and backplane suitable to drive an array of emissive elements.

FIG. 2A presents a block diagram of an emissive pixel driver element that provides alternative current mirror selection options.

FIG. 2B presents a schematic circuit diagram of a 6-transistor SRAM cell configured to act as a component of an emissive pixel driver element.

FIG. 2C presents a schematic circuit diagram of an emissive pixel drive circuit that provides alternative current mirror options.

FIG. 2D presents a schematic circuit diagram of a simplified pixel drive circuit that provides a current to drive an emissive device with a pulse width modulated current.

FIG. 2E presents a schematic circuit diagram of elements of an emissive driver circuit that provides a heavily mirrored current source.

FIG. 3A presents a logical diagram of an inverter circuit.

FIG. 3B presents a schematic circuit diagram of a CMOS inverter circuit.

FIG. 3C presents a side view of the physical structure of a CMOS inverter circuit.

FIG. 3D presents an overhead view of the physical structure of a CMOS inverter circuit.

FIG. 4A presents an overhead view of elements of a CMOS substrate/well structure spanning four driver pixels.

FIG. 4B presents an overhead view of a CMOS substrate/well structure spanning the entire width of an array of emissive elements.

FIG. 4C presents a detailed overhead view of a 2×3 pixel section of a CMOS substrate/well structure spanning the entire width of an array of emissive elements.

FIG. 4D presents a hybrid view of a series of p-channel FETs formed in an n-well wherein groups of the FETs should be threshold matched.

FIGS. 5A and 5B present graphs of the voltage performance of an n-channel FET over its cutoff, triode and saturation ranges.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

One aspect of the present invention is the use of multiple current sources in parallel that are duplicates of the FET used to generate the reference current to create a higher current output. The parallel current sources must have similar threshold voltages. Another aspect of the present invention is a need to provide high current to an array of high brightness emissive elements. This requires the use of a complex current mirror circuit with many parallel current sources each replicating a reference current circuit.

Because the high current can lead to excessive heating if the resistance of the current sources is high, one object of the present invention is to realize the reference current device and the current source devices in as low a resistance configuration as feasible. Joule heating in a device is calculated as the product of the square of the current multiplied by the resistance. A way to achieve low resistance is to design the devices as large W, short L FETs. The limitation of this approach is that matching the performance characteristics of such devices, such as threshold voltage V_(T) or V_(TH), is challenging. An alternative reference for threshold voltage is V_(GS(TH)), which is the voltage at which the gate voltage will turn on the FET to a degree. V_(GS) is the voltage difference between the source voltage and the gate voltage. The present invention includes design mechanisms to control the impact of variation between devices by designing a number of features into the complex current mirror circuit to facilitate current averaging in the complex current mirror circuit.

One additional feature of the present invention is a set of at least one additional current mirror circuit parallel to the one mentioned above that can be switched in or out through an external command as needed to improve the circuit averaging outcome. In one embodiment, the additional reference current circuit is wired in parallel to the first reference current circuit and the additional current source circuit is wired in parallel to the first current source circuit such that all reference current circuits supply current to all current source circuits.

These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after having read the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments, which is illustrated in the various drawing figures.

In the present application, the preceding general description and the following specific description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not restrictive of the invention as claimed. It should be noted that, as used in the specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for examples, reference to a material may include mixtures of materials; reference to a display may include multiple display, and the like. Use of the word display is synonymous with the term array of pixels as well as other similar terms. A display need not be used as a means for presenting information for human viewing and may include an array of pixels for any use. All references cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety, except to the extent that they conflict with teachings explicitly set forth in this specification. The terms MOSFET transistor, FET transistor, FET and transistor are considered to be equivalent. All transistors described herein are MOSFET transistors unless otherwise indicated. Those of skill in the art will recognize that equivalent circuits may be created in nMOS silicon or pMOS silicon.

The present application deals with binary data used for pulse width modulation. Although common practice is to use the number 1 to indicate an on state and the number 0 to indicate an off state, this convention is arbitrary and may be reversed, as is well known in the art. Similarly, the use of the terms high and low to indicate on or off is arbitrary and, in the area of circuit design, misleading, because p-channel FET transistors are in a conducting state (on) when the gate voltage is low and in a nonconducting state (off) when the gate voltage is high. The use of the word binary means that the data represents one of two states. Commonly the two states are referred to as on or off. It does not mean that the duration in time of binary elements of data is also binary weighted. In emissive displays as those of the present invention, it is often possible for a pixel of the emissive display to achieve an off state that is truly off, in that no noticeable residual leakage of light from that pixel occurs when the data state of the circuit driving a pixel of the emissive device is placed to off.

The term conductor shall mean a conductive material, such as copper, aluminum, or polysilicon, operative to carry a modulated or unmodulated voltage or signal. The word wire shall have the same meaning as the term conductor. The word terminal shall mean a connection point to a circuit element. A terminal may be a conductor or a node or other construct. Conductors shall be represented by solid lines unless otherwise indicated. Lines that cross one another are not considered to be electrically connected unless there is a solid connection dot placed over the intersection.

The present application makes use of current mirror circuits, the simplest forms of which are well known in the art. A minimal current mirror circuit comprises two p-channel FETs that may be duplicates of each other and one n-channel FET that biases the current to a required voltage level. The terminology describing the components of a current mirror circuit is not consistent across various documents. In the present application, the device generating the reference current to be cloned is called a reference current FET and the current it generates is the reference current or I_(REF). The device that sets the voltage level of the reference current is the bias FET and the voltage level it sets is the reference voltage or V_(REF). Thus the reference is current I_(REF) at potential V_(REF). The device that receives the reference current at the reference voltage is the current source FET. Its output is termed the output current with appropriate qualifiers.

FIG. 1A presents a diagram of the data transfer sections and selected external interfaces of spatial light modulator (SLM) 100. SLM 100 comprises pixel drive circuit array 101, left row decoder 105L, right row decoder 105R, column data register array 104, control block 103, and wire bond pad blocks 1021 (lower) and 102 u (upper.) Wire bond pad block 1021 is configured so as to enable contact with an FPCA or other suitable connecting means so as to receive data and control signals over lines from an SLM controller such as that of FIG. 1B. The data and control signal lines for lower wire bond pad block 1021 comprise clock signal line 111, op code signal lines 112, serial input-output signal lines 113, bidirectional temperature signal lines 114, and parallel data signal lines 115. The selected interfaces for upper wire bond pad block 102 u comprise circuit voltages V_H 116, emissive pixel current mirror selection signal pads 117 and 118, rail voltages V_(DDAR) and V_(SS) pad 119 and common cathode return (V_Low) 120. The total number of wire bond pads may easily exceed 100 separate pads and may reach several hundred pads. Some voltage supply pads, such as pads for V_(SS) or V_(DDAR), may be present in multiple instances.

Wire bond pad block 1021 receives connections for emissive pixel state data and control signals and moves these signals to control block 103. Control block 103 receives the emissive pixel state data and routes the data to column data register array 104. Row address information is routed to row decoder left 105L and to row decoder right 105R. In one embodiment, the value of Op Code line 112 determines whether data received on parallel data signal lines 115 is address information indicating the row to which data is to be loaded or data to be loaded to a row. In one embodiment the row address information acts as header, appearing first in a time ordered sequence, to be followed by data for that row. In the context of the present application, the word “address” is most often a noun used to convey the location of the row to be written. The location may be conveyed as an offset from the location (address) of a baseline row or it may be an absolute location of the row to be written. This is similar to the manner in which a Random-Access Memory device, such as an SRAM, is written or read. The use of column addressing, also used in Random-Access Memory devices, may be envisioned, but other mechanisms, such as a shift register, are also envisioned. Use of a shift register to enable the writing of data to rows of the array is also envisioned.

Row decoder left 105L and row decoder right 105R are configured to pull the word line for the decoded row high so that data for that row may be transferred from bit line driver elements forming column data register array 104 to the storage elements resident in the pixel cells of that row of pixel array 251. In one embodiment, row decoder left 105L pulls the word line high for a left half of the display, and row decoder right 105R pulls the word line high for a right half of the display.

The depiction of left and right side row decoder circuits and upper and lower wire bond pad circuits is purely for ease of reference and is not limiting upon the present invention.

FIG. 1B depicts a simplified diagram 180 of display controller interfaces with an array of pixel circuits. A display controller comprises static voltage section 181 a, signal voltage control section 181 b and data memory and logic control section 181 c. A first row of pixel circuits comprises pixel 182 a 1 and pixel circuit 182 a 2. A second row of pixel circuits comprises pixel circuit 182 b 1 and pixel circuit 182 b 2. A third row of pixel circuits comprises pixel circuit 182 c 1 and pixel circuit 182 c 2. A first column of pixel circuits comprises pixel circuit 182 a 1, pixel circuit 182 b 1 and pixel circuit 182 c 1. A second column of pixel circuits comprises pixel circuit 182 a 2, pixel circuit 182 b 2 and pixel circuit 182 c 2. The choice of this number of pixel circuits in FIG. 1B is for ease of reference and is not limiting upon this disclosure. Arrays of pixel circuits comprising in excess of 1000 rows and 1000 columns are commonplace in products for both display purposes and non-display purposes.

Static voltage section 181 a provides a set of voltages required to operate the array of pixel circuits, said voltages comprising V_(DDAR), V_(SS), upper drive voltage V_H and cathode return voltage V_L loaded onto static voltage distribution bus 183 a. Static voltage distribution bus 183 a distributes V_(DDAR), V_H, V_(SS) and V_L to the pixel circuits of a first row over conductor 187 a, to the pixel circuits of a second row over conductor 187 b and to the pixel circuits of a third row over conductor 187 c, wherein each of conductors 187 a, 187 b and 187 c comprises at least one separate conductor for each supplied static voltage.

Signal voltage control section 181 b delivers control signals required to operate the array of pixels, such as word line (WLINE) high for the selected row, over bus 183 b. Signal voltage control 181 b delivers signals to signal voltage distribution bus 183 b, which in turn delivers the signals to the pixels of a first row over conductor 188 a, to the pixels of a second row over conductor 288 b and to the pixels of a third row over conductor 188 c. Conductors 188 a, 188 b and 188 c each may comprise a plurality of conductors such that each control signal is delivered independently of other control signals. The row on which WLINE is to be held high is selected by a row decoder circuit (not shown) Timing of the signal voltages and their application to the circuit are typically controlled by an executive function such as data memory and logic control section 181 c. The word line for the selected row is one of conductor 189 a, conductor 189 b or conductor 189 c, as determined by the state of each row decoder set by data memory and logic control section 281 c.

Data memory and logic control section 181 c performs several functions. It may, for example, process modulation data received in a standard 8-bit or 12-bit format into a form usable to pulse-width modulate a display. A first function is to select a row for data to be written to and a second function is to load the data to be written to that row. Data memory and logic control section 181 c loads image data onto column (bit line) drivers 191 a and 191 b over bus 185. Conductors 184 a 1 and 184 a 2 represent a first pair of complementary bit lines that route data to the first column. Conductors 184 b 1 and 184 b 2 represent a second pair of complementary bit lines that route data to the second column. Each of said pair of complementary bit lines are operative to transfer data from column drivers 191 a or 191 b respectively to the memory cell of each pixel of the selected row. Data memory and logic control section 181 c loads the selected address information onto address data bus 183 c, which acts to select the correct row using row decoder circuit 190 a, row decoder circuit 190 b and row decoder circuit 190 c each positioned on address data bus 183 c. When WLINE for the selected row is held high, the data on the bit line drivers are loaded into the memory cell of each pixel of the selected row.

Column (bit line) drivers 191 a and 191 b may each comprise a tri-state buffer and a memory cell, wherein the memory cell asserts its output onto the tri-state buffer. The tri-state buffer further comprises an enable terminal and an output. When a signal is received from data memory and logic control section on the enable terminal, the value asserted on the input of the tri-state memory cell is then asserted onto its output. This provides a measure of control over the loading of data onto the bit lines.

One additional function to be managed by data memory and logic control section 181 c is the operation of one or more current mirror circuit configuration lines operative to change the configuration of components within each of the pixels. In one embodiment, the configuration lines are global signals affecting all of the pixel circuits of the array of emissive elements at substantially the same time. In one embodiment, the configuration lines are semi-global, affecting all pixels of a portion of the array.

FIG. 2A presents a block diagram of a pixel drive element 200 of an array of emissive elements after the present invention. Drive element 200 comprises SRAM 201, selectable reference current FETs 202 and 203, non-selectable reference current FET 204, selectable current source FETs 205 and 206, non-selectable current source FET 207 and large L n-channel voltage bias FET assembly 211, operative to drive LED 212.

Bus 215 is biased to voltage V_H, which connects to selectable reference current FETs 202 and 203, non-selectable reference current FET 204, selectable current source FETs 205 and 206 and non-selectable current source FET 207. Bus 214 is biased to V_(REF) by large L n-channel FET assembly 211 at a level determined by global signal V_(BIAS) asserted onto the gate of large L n-channel FET assembly 211 over terminal 222. Bus 217 is biased by bus 214 to a value equal to V_(REF) minus the small threshold voltage of switch FET 208.

Selection signal Config1 is asserted onto control line 213, routed to selectable reference current circuit 203 over conductor 223, and to selectable current source circuit 206, and selection signal Config2 is asserted over control line 216, routed to selectable reference current circuit 202 over conductor 221 and to selectable current source circuit 205. Selections signal Config1 and Config2 may each be operated independently of the other. In one embodiment, when selection signal Config1 or Config2 is high, the current reference circuit and current source circuit associated with the selection signal that is high are configured to mirror current onto the output of the circuit associated with that selection signal. When selection signal Config1 or Config2 is low, the reference current circuit and current source circuit associated with the selection signal that is low are configured not to mirror current onto the output of the current source FETs associated with that selection signal.

Non-selectable current reference FET 204 is configured to an always on configuration. The gate of non-selectable reference current FET 204 connects to V_(REF) bus 214 over conductor 231, thereby placing FET 204 in diode mode in all cases where V_(REF) is asserted onto bus 214.

In a principal embodiment, selectable reference current FETs 202 and 203 and non-selectable reference current FET 204 are identical FETs, and each current FET found in selectable current source FETs 205 and 206 and in non-selectable current FET 207 are identical to the reference current FETs found in reference current FETs 202, 203 and 204. In the same embodiment, the FET configurations of current source FETs 205, 206 and 207 are identical. In one embodiments, each of current source FET 205, 206 and 207 are comprised of a like number of FETs identical to the FETs of reference current FETs 202, 203 and 204.

The need for the previously identified selectable reference current/current source FETs in the current mirror components of pixel drive element 200 is to provide a selectable level of backup in the event that the pixel circuit elements are not sufficiently matched in performance; i.e., if the level of mismatch is high enough to render a number of pixel drive elements unusable or excessively weak or bright.

Because the selectable reference current/current source FETs are separately wired parallel to the non-selectable FETs, the overall width ratio of the current reference FETs to current source FETs is unchanged and so the level of current provided is unchanged regardless of the selection state.

Modulation FET 209 is a p-channel switch FET configured to modulate the output of non-selectable current source FET 207 and to modulate the outputs of selectable current source FETs 205 and 206 (when those FETs are selected) in conjunction with p-channel bus switch FET 208.

SRAM 201 comprises complementary outputs S_(POS) and S_(NEG) asserted on conductors 218 and 219. Through its outputs, SRAM 201 controls three different components of pixel drive element 200. The output asserted on conductor 218 is termed S_(POS) and the output asserted on conductor 219 is termed S_(NEG). This is a commonly used convention for the two output terminals of an SRAM. When signal S_(POS) is high, it places p-channel modulation FET 209 in an off state. When signal S_(POS) is high, signal S_(NEG) is necessarily low, which places p-channel bus switch FET 208 is an on state. When S_(POS) is low and signal S_(NEG) is high, the reverse is true. Thus modulation FET 209 and switch FET 208 are never both conducting in an on state at the same time. As will be shown, when modulation FET 209 is in an off state, current source FET 207 is able to release output current onto its output.

Modulation is accomplished through a series of states in which the individual emissive elements switch between states in which the emissive element is emitting light and states in which the emissive element is not emitting light. The data state of SRAM memory cell 201 determines if associated emissive element 212 is on or off. When S_(POS) is high, modulation FET 209 is off and bus switch FET 208 is on. When bus switch FET 208 is on, V_(REF) is effectively asserted onto bus 217. This asserts V_(REF) onto the gate of non-selectable current source FET 207. Additionally, it asserts V_(REF) onto any of the selectable current source FETs 205 and 206 that are selected on by Config1 or Config2. When S_(POS) is low, V_(REF) is effectively removed because bus switch FET 208 is turned off. Additionally, modulation FET 209 connects bus 217 to V_H, which places V_H on the gate of current source FET 207, effectively taking it out of saturation, thereby causing current source FET 207 to cease functioning as a current source. If either of selectable current source FETs 205 or 206 is selected on, V_H is asserted to it and no current is generated by that FET. These two switch steps create a highly effective modulation scheme.

The third component controlled by SRAM 201 is large L n-channel FET assembly 211 operative to act as a reference voltage bias FET. A second component in assembly 211 is an n-channel switch FET placed between the large L n-channel FET and ground line 229 (biased to V_(SS) or ground.) When S_(NEG) is low, inverter 210 asserts a high signal onto the gate of the n-channel switch FET over conductor 220, which completes the connection of ground line 229 to the large L n-channel FET that forms part of assembly. This enables assembly 211 to provide V_(REF) over conductor 228 to bus 214. When S_(NEG) is high, inverter 210 asserts a low signal onto the gate of the n-channel switch FET of conductor 220, which breaks the connection between ground line 229 to the large L n-channel FET of assembly 211.

The purpose of this action is to control heating within the pixel cells in an off state by reducing current flows that do not result in emitted light. This is expected to work well in non-imaging applications such as automotive headlamps provided the duty cycle of each pixel is relatively low. High duty cycle applications, such as high emission displays may suffer from data dependent variations in emissions, which is normally to be avoided.

The current output of selectable current source FET 205 is asserted onto conductor 227. The current output selectable current source FET 206 is asserted onto conductor 226. The output of non-selectable current source FET 207 is asserted onto conductor 225. Conductors 226 and 227 connect to conductor 225, which in turn connects to the anode of emissive element (LED) 212. This insures that all current sources operate in parallel and that all mirrored current is all delivered to the LED. The cathode of emissive element 212 is connected to bus 230, which is biased on V_L. In one embodiment, all cathodes are biased to a common voltage in a common cathode arrangement. In one embodiment, the common cathode V_L is equal to V_(SS).

An explanation is made with respect to FIGS. 2C and 2D regarding the actual current delivered to emissive element 212.

FIG. 2B shows a preferred embodiment of a storage element 250, also referred to as a memory cell. Storage element 250 is preferably a CMOS static ram (SRAM) latch device. Such devices are well known in the art. See DeWitt U. Ong, Modern MOS Technology, Processes, Devices, & Design, 1984, Chapter 9-5, the details of which are hereby fully incorporated herein by reference. A static RAM is one in which the data is retained as long as power is applied, though no clocks are running FIG. 1B shows the most common implementation of an SRAM cell in which six transistors are used. FET transistors 258, 259, 260, and 261 are n-channel transistors, while FET transistors 262, and 263 are p-channel transistors. In this particular design, word line WLINE 251, when held high, turns on pass transistors 258 and 259 by asserting the state of WLINE 251 onto the gate of pass transistor 258 over conductor 252 and onto the gate of pass transistor 259 over conductor 253, allowing (B_(POS)) 254, and (B_(NEG)) 255 lines to remain at a pre-charged high state or be discharged to a low state by the flip flop (i.e., transistors 262, 263, 260, and 261). The potential on B_(POS) line 254 is asserted onto the source of pass transistor 258 over conductor 256, and the potential on B_(NEG) line 255 is asserted onto the source of pass transistor 259 over conductor 257. The drain of pass transistor 258 is asserted onto the drains of transistors 260 and 262 and onto the gates of transistors 261 and 263 over conductor 268 while the drain of pass transistor 259 is asserted onto the drains of transistors 261 and 263 and onto the gates of transistors 260 and 262 over conductor 267. Differential sensing of the state of the flip-flop is then possible. In writing data into the selected cell, (B_(POS)) 254 and (B_(NEG)) 255 are forced high or low by additional write circuitry on the periphery of the array of pixel circuits. The side that goes to a low value is the one most effective in causing the flip-flop to change state. In the present application, output port 269 (S_(POS)) and complementary output port 269 (S_(NEG)) are required to relay to circuitry in the remainder of the pixel circuit whether the data state of the SRAM is in an “on” state or an “off” state. A first signal output in this case is S_(NEG), asserted onto conductor 264, meaning that when the data state of storage element 250 is high or on, the output asserted onto conductor 264 is low. A second signal output is S_(POS), asserted onto conductor 269, meaning that when the data state of storage element 250 is high, or on, the output asserted onto conductor 269 is high. As will be shown regarding FIG. 2C, S_(POS) is asserted on the gate of a first p-channel, causing it to conduct when S_(POS) is low, and S_(NEG) is asserted onto the gate of a second p-channel FET, causing it to conduct when S_(NEG) is low. Because S_(POS) and S_(NEG) cannot both be low at the same time, the two FETs can never conduct at the same time. Good use of this is made in the circuit of FIG. 2C, as will be shown. Since S_(POS) and S_(NEG) are complementary, either or both sides can be used to provide the data state of memory cell 250.

SRAM circuit 250 is connected to V_(DDAR) by conductor 265 and to V_(SS) by conductor 266. V_(DDAR) denotes the V_(DD) for the array. It is common practice to use lower voltage transistors for periphery circuits such as the I/O circuits and control logic of a backplane for a variety of reasons, including the reduction of EMI and the reduced circuit size that this makes possible.

The six-transistor SRAM cell is desirable in CMOS type design and manufacturing since it involves the least amount of detailed circuit design and process knowledge and is the safest with respect to noise and other effects that may be hard to estimate before silicon is available. In addition, current processes are dense enough to allow large static RAM arrays. These types of storage elements are therefore desirable in the design and manufacture of liquid crystal on silicon display devices as described herein. However, other types of static RAM cells are contemplated by the present invention, such as a four transistor RAM cell using a NOR gate, as well as using dynamic RAM cells rather than static RAM cells. The convention in looking at the outputs of an SRAM is to term the outputs as complementary signals S_(POS) and S_(NEG).

FIG. 2C presents a schematic diagram of a current mirror pixel drive element 300 for an emissive element of an array of emissive elements. The element description follows that given for the block diagram of pixel drive element 200 of FIG. 2A. Pixel drive element 300 comprises two separately selectable reference current circuits and one non-selectable reference current circuit, two selectable current source circuits and one non-selectable current source circuit, a bias FET, a memory cell with complementary outputs and switch FETs configured to pulse width modulate the current output of current mirror pixel drive element 300.

A first selectable reference current circuit comprises p-channel switch FETs 305 and 306 and p-channel reference current FET 307. P-channel switch FETs 305 and 306 form means by which a gate voltage for reference current FET 307 is selected from one of two possible voltages. The two voltages are V_H, asserted on bus 334 from an external supply over terminal 347 and V_(REF), asserted on bus 346. The source of p-channel switch FET 305 is connected to bus 334, and the drain of switch FET 305 is connected to the source of switch FET 306 and to the gate of reference current FET 307. The drain of p-channel switch FET 306 is connected to bus 346, which asserts V_(REF) on that drain.

Control over which of switch FETs 305 and 306 is set to conduct is determined by signal Config2 asserted on terminal 324, which biases conductor 343 to the level of signal Config2. Conductor 343 connects to conductor 329, which is connected to the gate of switch FET 305. Conductor 343 also connects to the input of inverter 303, which connects to the gate of switch FET 306 over conductor 344. Because the input to the gate of FET 305 is Config2 and the input to the gate of FET 306 is the inverse of Config2, only one of p-channel switch FET 305 and p-channel switch FET 306 can be placed in a conducting state. When Config2 is high, switch FET 305 is selected off and switch FET 306 is selected on. Because in this mode the gate of reference current FET 307 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 346 through switch FET 306 and the drain of reference current FET 307 is directly connected to V_(REF) on bus 346, reference current FET 307 is placed in diode mode and is operative to generate a current onto bus 346. When Config2 is low, switch FET 305 is selected on and switch FET 306 is selected off. This asserts V_H on the gate of reference current FET 307, which already has V_H on its source. This action takes current source FET 307 out of saturation and no reference current issues from the drain of reference current FET 307.

Config2 also determines the state of a selectable current source assembly comprising p-channel switch FETs 313 and 314 and p-channel current source FET 315. As with the preceding example, the source of switch FET 313 is connected to V_H on bus 334, and the drain of switch FET 313 is connected to the source of switch FET 314 and to the gate of current source FET 315. The drain of switch FET 314 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 328. The source of current source FET 315 is connected to V_H over bus 334. The drain of current source FET 315 is connected to the drains of current source FETs 318 and 320 and to the anode of LED 337 over conductor 335.

Control over which of switch FETs 313 and 314 is set to conduct is determined by signal Config2 asserted on terminal 324, which biases conductor 343 to the level of signal Config2. Conductor 343 connects to conductor 329, which is connected to the gate of switch FET 313. Conductor 343 also connects to the input of inverter 303, which connects to the gate of switch FET 314 over conductor 342. Because the input to the gate of FET 313 is Config2 and the input to the gate of switch FET 314 is the inverse of Config2, only one of p-channel switch FET 313 and p-channel switch FET 314 can be placed in a conducting state. When Config2 is high, switch FET 313 is selected off and switch FET 314 is selected on. Because in this mode the gate of current source FET 315 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 346 through switch FET 314, and the drain of current source FET 315 is connected to the anode of LED 337 over conductor 345, which connects to conductor 335, current source FET 315 will provide current to drive LED 337. When Config2 is low, switch FET 313 is selected on and switch FET 314 is selected off. This asserts V_H on the gate of current source FET 315, which already has V_H on its source. This action takes current source FET 315 out of saturation and no current issues from the drain of current source FET 315 onto conductor 336.

Taking the previous description of the current source assembly comprising switch FETs 305 and 306 and current source FET 307 and the previous description of the current source assembly comprising switch FETs 313 and 314 and current source FET 315, these two assemblies operate in unison since both are controlled in a similar manner by signal Config2.

A second selectable reference current circuit comprises p-channel switch FETs 308 and 309 and p-channel reference current FET 310. P-channel switch FETs 308 and 309 form means by which a gate voltage for reference current FET 310 is selected from one of two possible voltages. The two voltages are V_H, asserted on bus 334 and V_(REF), asserted on bus 346. The source of p-channel switch FET 308 is connected to bus 334, and the drain of p-channel switch FET 308 is connected to the source of switch FET 309 and to the gate of reference current FET 310. The drain of p-channel switch FET 309 is connected to bus 346, which asserts V_(REF) on that drain.

Control over which of switch FETs 308 and 309 is set to conduct is determined by signal Config1 asserted on terminal 323, which biases conductor 326 to the level of signal Config1. Conductor 326 connects to the gate of switch FET 308 over conductor 349. Conductor 326 also connects to the input of inverter 302, which connects to the gate of switch FET 309 over conductor 327 and conductor 348. Because the input to the gate of FET 308 is Config1 and the input to the gate of FET 309 is the inverse of Config1, only one of p-channel switch FET 308 and p-channel switch FET 309 can be placed in a conducting state. When Config1 is high, switch FET 308 is selected off and switch FET 309 is selected on. Because in this mode the gate of current source FET 310 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 346 through switch FET 309 and the drain of current source FET 310 is directly connected to V_(REF) on bus 346, current source FET 310 is placed in diode mode and is operative to deliver a current onto bus 346. When Config1 is low, switch FET 308 is selected on and switch FET 309 is selected off. This asserts V_H on the gate of current source FET 310, which already has V_H on its source. This action takes current source FET 310 out of saturation and no current issues from the drain of current source FET 310.

Config1 also determines the state of a selectable current source circuit comprising p-channel switch FETs 316 and 317 and p-channel current source FET 318. As with the preceding example, the source of switch FET 316 is connected to V_H on bus 334, and the drain of switch FET 316 is connected to the source of switch FET 317 and to the gate of current source FET 318. The drain of switch FET 317 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 328. The source of current source FET 318 is connected to V_H over bus 334. The drain of current source FET 318 is connected to the drain of current source FET 315 over conductors 336, 335 and 345 and to the drain of current source 320 and to the anode of LED 337 over conductors 336 and 335.

Control over which of switch FETs 316 and 317 is set to conduct is determined by signal Config1 asserted on terminal 323, which biases bus 326 to the level of signal Config1. Bus 326 connects to the gate of switch FET 316. Conductor 326 also connects to the input of inverter 302, which connects to the gate of switch FET 317 over conductor 327. Because the input to the gate of switch FET 316 is Config1 and the input to the gate of switch FET 317 is the inverse of Config1, only one of p-channel switch FET 316 and p-channel switch FET 317 can be placed in a conducting state. When Config1 is high, switch FET 316 is selected off and switch FET 317 is selected on. Because in this mode the gate of current source FET 318 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 346 through switch FET 317, and the drain of current source FET 318 is connected to the anode of LED 337 over conductor 336, which connects to conductor 335, current source FET 318 will provide current to drive LED 337. When Config1 is low, switch FET 316 is selected on and switch FET 317 is selected off. This asserts V_H on the gate of current source FET 318, which already has V_H on its source. This action takes current source FET 318 out of saturation and no current issues from the drain of current source FET 318 onto conductor 336.

Taking the previous description of the current source assembly comprising switch FETs 308 and 309 and current source FET 310 and the previous description of the current source assembly comprising switch FETs 316 and 317 and current source FET 318, these two assemblies operate in unison—on or off—since both are controlled in a similar manner by signal Config1.

Signals Config1 and Config2 operate in a similar manner but can be operated independently of each other, A choice of how to operate Config1 and Config2 can be determined within control logic of the system, as previously noted for control system 180 of FIG. 1B.

Non-selectable reference current FET 311 is configured as a classic reference current component of a current mirror circuit. The source of reference current FET 311 is connected to V_H over bus 334. The gate and drain of reference current FET 311 are both connected to V_(REF) over bus 346, placing reference current FET 311 in diode mode. The drain of reference current FET 311 always asserts its output over bus 346.

Non-selectable current source FET 320 is configured as a classic current source component of a current mirror circuit. The source of current source FET 320 is connected to V_H over bus 334. The gate of current source FET 320 is connected to V_(REF) over bus 328. The drain of current source FET 320 is connected to the drain of current source FET 315 and to the drain of current source FET 318.

Since reference current FETs 307, 310 and 311 are identical and are connected in parallel and since current source FETs 315, 318 and 320 are identical and are connected in parallel, the net current the current mirror circuit provides should not change substantially regardless of whether or not Config1 or Config2 are selected high or low. Because all of the FETs are nominally identical, when the two optional FETs are selected in through the Config signal, the effective width of the three reference current FETs effectively become three times the width of a single reference current FET and the effective width of the three current source FETs becomes three times the width of a single current source FET. The main exception to the current rule would occur if there is a significant mismatch within the reference current circuits or the current source circuits.

A last requirement for a current mirror circuit is the provision of a reference voltage to bias the current to a required voltage needed to insure that LED 337 is driven to emit light when current is present on its anode. Large L n-channel bias FET 321 provides the required bias voltage to pixel drive element 300. The gate of large L n-channel bias FET 321 functions as a voltage controlled resistor, when operated in saturation, that receives on its gate a global or semi-global voltage V_(BIAS) asserted from an external source on connection point 325 over conductor 330. The source of bias FET 321 is connected to the drain of n-channel switch FET 322, which, when configured to conduct, connects ground (V_(SS)) from its source onto the source of bias FET 321. The operation of switch FET 322 is explained in conjunction with the data modulation of pixel drive element 300. The drain of bias FET 321 is connected over conductor 341 to bus 346, which biases bus 346 to V_(REF). Bias voltage V_(BIAS) is connected from bus 346 onto bus 328 by p-channel switch FET 312 when switch FET 312 is set to conduct by a low signal on its gate. The operation of switch FET 312 is explained in conjunction with the data modulation of pixel drive element 300.

Pixel drive element 300 includes features enabling its modulation by the data state of a memory device forming a part of pixel drive element 300. SRAM memory element 301 is a dual output memory device, preferably a 6 transistor (6T) device such as SRAM circuit 250 of FIG. 2B. The complementary outputs of memory element 301 comprise S_(POS) asserted on conductor 333 and S_(NEG) asserted on conductor 331. As complementary outputs, when S_(POS) is high, S_(NEG) is necessarily low, and vice versa. Conductor 333 asserts S_(POS) directly on the gate of modulation FET 319. Conductor 331 asserts S_(NEG) directly on the gate of switch FET 312, which is operative to connect bus 346 to bus 328.

The operation of modulation FET 319 and switch FET 312 are coordinated such that only one at a time is closed. The operation of both FETs 319 and 312 in this manner is important to effective modulation of pixel drive element 300. When S_(POS) is high, the gate of modulation FET 319 is high and modulation FET 319 does not conduct. When S_(POS) is high, S_(NEG) is low and, responsive to the low signal on its gate, switch FET 312 conducts, connecting bus 346 to bus 328. This asserts V_(REF) onto bus 328, thereby asserting V_(REF) on the gate of selectable current source FET 315 or selectable current source FET 318 or both, if selected on, and to the gate of non-selectable current source FET 320. In this condition, at least some current is provided to LED 337. When S_(POS) is low and S_(NEG) is high, switch 312 does not conduct, thereby separating bus 346 from bus 328. In this condition, the conditions for a current mirror circuit are not met, and no current is delivered to LED 337. Additionally, modulation FET 319 is set to conduct, thereby connecting bus 328 to voltage V_H found on bus 334. This drains any residual potential found on bus 328, thereby assuring a clean transition of LED 337 from a radiating state to a non-radiating state.

The cathode of LED 337 is connected to V_L over conductor 338. In one embodiment, V_L is a semi-global voltage with a different V_L possible for LEDs of different colors. In one embodiment, voltage V_L is provided in a common cathode configuration wherein all cathodes of LEDs are connected together. In one embodiment, V_L is equal to V_(SS).

Signal S_(NEG) asserted on conductor 331 also is asserted onto the input of inverter 304 over conductor 332. When S_(NEG) is low, the input to inverter 304 is low and the output of inverter 304 asserted onto the gate of n-channel switch FET 322 is high. This places n-channel switch FET 322 in a conducting state, thereby connecting ground 339 (V_(SS)) to the source of large L n-channel bias FET 321. This allows bias FET 321 to set voltage V_(REF) onto bus 346 over conductor 341. When S_(NEG) is high, the output of inverted 304 asserted onto the gate of switch FET 322 is low. This places n-channel switch FET in a non-conduct state which breaks the connection from ground 339 to the source of large L n-channel bias FET 321. Now no voltage is asserted on bus 346. As previously noted, this condition also breaks the connection between bus 346 and bus 328 and connects bus 328 to V_H, so that no radiation takes place.

The use of inverter 304 attached to S_(NEG) conductor 331 to invert S_(NEG) to a signal identical to S_(POS) is preferable to a direct connection to S_(POS) conductor 333 because it provides isolation and prevents the high current loads associated with switch FET 339 from pulling on S_(POS) conductor 333.

The purpose of using switch FET 322 to remove bias from bus 346 is primarily to reduce any residual heating due to the presence of voltage on bias FET 321. It is understood that this may also create some data dependent fluctuations in the intensity of light emitted by LED 337. For display applications, the source of bias FET 321 can be connected directly to ground 339 and switch FET 322 and inverter 304 can both be eliminated.

FIG. 2D presents a schematic diagram of a simplified version of current mirror pixel drive element 300 of FIG. 2C with a reduced number of transistors for an emissive element of an array of emissive elements. Simplifications over FIG. 2C comprise the elimination of one inverter, relocation of two inverters to the periphery of the array where they can serve a number of separate pixel drive circuits, and the elimination of two multiplexer circuits and the elimination of one switch FET. Pixel drive element 500 comprises two separately selectable reference current circuits and one non-selectable reference current circuit, two selectable current source circuits and one non-selectable current source circuit, a bias FET, a memory cell with complementary outputs and a modulation FET configured to pulse width modulate the current output of current mirror pixel drive element 500.

Config1 and Config2 are selection signals used to introduce additional circuits into the current mirror pixel drive circuit of FIG. 2D. Selection signal Config1 is asserted onto conductor 526 over terminal 523. The other end of conductor 526 terminates at terminal 516, which connects to terminal 523 of an adjacent pixel drive circuit. The complement of selection signal Config1 is asserted onto conductor 527 over terminal 513. The other end of conductor 527 terminates at terminal 517, which connects to terminal 513 of an adjacent pixel drive circuit. Selection signal Config2 is asserted onto conductor 543 over terminal 514. The other end of conductor 543 terminates at terminal 504, which connects to a terminal 514 of an adjacent pixel drive circuit. The complement of selection signal Config2 is asserted onto conductor 542 over terminal 524. The other end of conductor 542 terminates at terminal 503, which connects to a terminal 524 of an adjacent pixel drive circuit.

The signals for Config1 and its complement and for Config2 and its complement may be generated at the periphery of the overall array of pixel drive circuits. This reduces the number of FETs in the pixel drive circuit at the price of requiring f97r continuous connections for the configuration signals across the array rather than two.

A first selectable reference current circuit comprises p-channel switch FETs 505 and 506 and p-channel reference current FET 507. P-channel switch FETs 505 and 506 form a multiplexer by which a gate voltage for reference current FET 507 is selected from one of two possible voltages. The two voltages are V_H, asserted on bus 534 from an external supply over terminal 547 and V_(REF), asserted on bus 546. The source of p-channel switch FET 505 is connected to bus 534, and the drain of switch FET 505 is connected to the source of switch FET 506 and to the gate of reference current FET 507. The drain of p-channel switch FET 506 is connected to bus 546, which asserts V_(REF) on that drain. The source of FET 506, the drain of FET 505 and the gate of FET 507 are all connected by conductor 502 to the gate of FET 515.

Control over which of multiplexer FETs 505 and 506 is set to conduct is determined by signal Config2. Signal Config2 is asserted on terminal 514, which biases conductor 543 to the level of signal Config2. The complement of signal Config2 is asserted over terminal 524, which biases conductor 542 to the complement of signal Config2. Conductor 543 connects to conductor 529, which is connected to the gate of switch FET 505, thereby asserting Config2 on that gate. Conductor 542 connects to conductor 544, which connects to the gate of switch FET 506, thereby biasing that gate to the complement of Config2. Because the input to the gate of FET 505 is Config2 and the input to the gate of FET 506 is the complement of Config2, only one of p-channel switch FET 505 and p-channel switch FET 506 can be placed in a conducting state. When Config2 is high, switch FET 505 is selected off and switch FET 506 is selected on. Because in this mode the gate of reference current FET 507 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 546 through switch FET 506 and the drain of reference current FET 307 is directly connected to V_(REF) on bus 546, reference current FET 507 is placed in diode mode and is operative to generate a current onto bus 546. When Config2 is low, switch FET 505 is selected on and switch FET 506 is selected off. This asserts V_H on the gate of reference current FET 507, which already has V_H on its source. This action takes current source FET 507 out of saturation and no reference current issues from the drain of reference current FET 507.

Config2 also determines the state of a selectable current source assembly comprising p-channel current source FET 515. Because the gate and drain of reference current FET 507 are connected to the gate of current mirror FET 515, and because the source of reference current FET 507 and the source of current mirror FET 515 are connected over conductor 502 to V_H, these FETs are operative to operate as a current mirror circuit when switch FET 506 is set to conduct. When switch FET 505 is set to conduct, the source and gate of reference current FET 507 and current source FET 515 are set to the same voltage and

Taking the previous description of the current source assembly comprising switch FETs 505 and 506 and current source FET 507 and the previous description of the current source assembly comprising current source FET 515, these two assemblies operate in unison since both are controlled by signal Config2 and the multiplexer comprising switch FETs 505 and 506.

A second selectable reference current circuit comprises p-channel switch FETs 508 and 509 and p-channel reference current FET 510. P-channel switch FETs 508 and 509 form a multiplexer by which a gate voltage for reference current FET 510 is selected from one of two possible voltages. The two voltages are V_H, asserted on bus 534 and V_(REF), asserted on bus 546. The source of p-channel switch FET 508 is connected to bus 534, and the drain of p-channel switch FET 508 is connected to the source of switch FET 509 and to the gate of reference current FET 510. The drain of p-channel switch FET 509 is connected to bus 546, which asserts V_(REF) on that drain. The drain of FET 508, the source of FET 509 and the gate of reference current FET 510 are all connected to the drain of current source FET 518 over conductor 512.

Control over which of multiplexer switch FETs 508 and 509 is set to conduct is determined by signal Config1 asserted on terminal 523, which biases conductor 526 to the level of signal Config1 and by the complement of signal Config1 asserted on terminal 513, which biases conductor 527 to the level of the complement of signal Config1. Conductor 526 connects to the gate of switch FET 508 over conductor 549. Conductor 527 connects to the gate of switch FET 509 over conductor 548. Because the input to the gate of FET 508 is Config1 and the input to the gate of FET 509 is the complement of Config1, only one of p-channel switch FET 508 and p-channel switch FET 509 can be placed in a conducting state. When Config1 is high, switch FET 508 is selected off and switch FET 509 is selected on. Because in this mode the gate of current source FET 510 is connected to V_(REF) on bus 546 through switch FET 509 and the drain of current source FET 510 is directly connected to V_(REF) on bus 346, current source FET 510 is placed in diode mode and is operative to deliver a current onto bus 346. When Config1 is low, switch FET 508 is selected on and switch FET 509 is selected off. This asserts V_H on the gate of current source FET 310, which already has V_H on its source. This action takes current source FET 510 out of saturation and no current issues from the drain of current source FET 510.

Config1 also determines the state of a selectable current source circuit comprising p-channel current source FET 318. As with the example of Config2, the gate of reference current FET 510 is connected to the gate of current source FET 318. Because the select state of reference current FET 310 and current source FET 318 are determined by the voltage on the gate of each one, the two FETs are always in the same state, whether selected or non-selected. The source of reference current FET 510 and the source of current source FET 518 are connected to V_H over bus 534. The drain of current source FET 518 is connected to the drains of current source FETs 515 and 520 and to the anode of LED 537 over conductor 535.

Because the gate of reference current FET 510 is connected to the gate of current source FET 518 and because the sources of reference current FET 510 and current source FET 515 are both connected to V_H, when reference current FET 510 is operated in diode mode, then current source 518 mirrors the current of reference current FET 510, thus forming a current mirror circuit together.

Because reference current FET 510 and current mirror FET 518 share the output of the multiplexer comprising switch FET 508 and switch FET 509, when reference current FET 510 is in diode mode, current source FET 518 is configured to mirror the current asserted on its gate.

Signals Config1 and Config2 operate in a similar manner but can be operated independently of each other. A choice of how to operate Config1 and Config2 can be determined within control logic of the system, as previously noted for control system 180 of FIG. 1B.

Non-selectable reference current FET 511 is configured as a classic reference current component of a current mirror circuit. The source of reference current FET 511 is connected to V_H over bus 534. The gate and drain of reference current FET 511 are both connected to V_(REF) over bus 546, placing reference current FET 511 in diode mode. The drain of reference current FET 511 always asserts its output over bus 546.

Non-selectable current source FET 520 is configured as a classic current source component of a current mirror circuit. The source of current source FET 520 is connected to V_H over bus 534. The gate of current source FET 320 is connected to V_(REF) over bus 546. The drain of current source FET 520 is connected to the drain of current source FET 515 and to the drain of current source FET 518.

Since reference current FETs 507, 510 and 511 are identical and are connected in parallel and since current source FETs 515, 518 and 520 are identical and are connected in parallel, the net current the current mirror circuit provides should not change substantially regardless of whether or not Config1 or Config2 are selected high or low. Because all of the FETs are nominally identical, when the two optional FETs are selected in through the Config signal, the effective width of the three reference current FETs effectively become three times the width of a single reference current FET and the effective width of the three current source FETs becomes three times the width of a single current source FET. The main exception to the current rule would occur if there is a significant mismatch within the reference current circuits or the current source circuits.

A last requirement for a current mirror circuit is the provision of a reference voltage to bias the current to a required voltage needed to insure that LED 537 is driven to emit light when current is present on its anode. Large L n-channel bias FET 521 provides the required bias voltage to pixel drive element 300. The gate of large L n-channel bias FET 521 functions as a voltage controlled resistor, when operated in saturation, that receives on its gate a global or semi-global voltage V_(BIAS) asserted from an external source on connection point 525 over conductor 530. The source of bias FET 521 is connected to the drain of n-channel switch FET 522, which, when configured to conduct, connects ground (V_(SS)) (ground 539) from its source onto the source of bias FET 521. The operation of switch FET 522 is explained in conjunction with the data modulation of pixel drive element 500. The drain of bias FET 521 is connected over conductor 541 to bus 546, which biases bus 546 to V_(REF).

Pixel drive element 500 includes features enabling its modulation by the data state of a memory device forming a part of pixel drive element 500. SRAM memory element 501 is a dual output memory device, preferably a 6 transistor (6T) device such as SRAM circuit 250 of FIG. 2B. The complementary outputs of memory element 501 comprise S_(POS) asserted on conductor 533 and S_(NEG) which is not asserted on a conductor in this implementation.

The operation of modulation FET 519 and n-channel switch FET 522 are coordinated such that only one at a time is closed. The operation of both FETs 519 and 522 in this manner is important to effective modulation of pixel drive element 500. When S_(POS) is high, the gate of modulation FET 519 is high and modulation FET 519 does not conduct. When S_(POS) is high and, responsive to the high signal on its gate, switch FET 522 conducts, connecting large L n-channel FET to V_(SS) at ground 539. This asserts V_(REF) onto bus 546, thereby asserting V_(REF) on the gate of selectable current source FET 515 or selectable current source FET 518 or both, if selected on, and to the gate of non-selectable current source FET 520. In this condition, at least some current is provided to LED 537. In this mode, modulation FET 519 does not conduct and LED 537 radiates or discharges light.

When modulation FET 519 is set to conduct, thereby connecting bus 546 to voltage V_H found on bus 534, this drains any residual potential found on bus 546, thereby assuring a clean transition of LED 537 from a radiating state to a non-radiating state. Switch FET 522 disconnects large L n-channel FET 521 from V_(SS), thus preventing a direct short between V_H and V_(SS).

The cathode of LED 537 is connected to V_L over conductor 538. In one embodiment, V_L is a semi-global voltage with a different V_L possible for LEDs of different colors. In one embodiment, voltage V_L is provided in a common cathode configuration wherein all cathodes of LEDs are connected together. In one embodiment, V_L is equal to V_(SS).

Signal S_(POS) asserted on conductor 532 is asserted thereby onto the gate of n-channel switch FET 522. When S_(POS) is high, this places n-channel switch FET 522 in a conducting state, thereby connecting ground 539 (V_(SS)) to the source of large L n-channel bias FET 521. This allows bias FET 521 to set voltage V_(REF) onto bus 546 over conductor 541. When signal S_(POS) is low, this places n-channel switch FET 522 in a non-conduct state which breaks the connection from ground 539 to the source of large L n-channel bias FET 521. Now no voltage is asserted on bus 546. As previously noted, this condition also places modulation FET 519 in a mode to conduct which insures that no current is discharged.

The purpose of using switch FET 522 to remove bias from bus 546 is primarily to reduce any residual heating due to the presence of voltage on bias FET 521. In this circuit, it is also necessary to insure that no short exists across modulation FET 519 through large L n-channel FET 521 to V_(SS).

FIG. 2E depicts a single selectable current source circuit segment 350 similar to the previously noted example of pixel drive element 300 of FIG. 2C. Current mirror circuit segment 350 comprises a single pair of p-channel switch FETs 352 and 353 placed in series to form a multiplexer circuit, a plurality of current source FETs 361 through 366, V_(REF) bus segments 358 a, 358 b and 358 c, V_H bus segments 356 a, 356 b and 356 c, and switch FETs 352 and 353 output bus segments 357 a, 357 b and 357 c. A reference current FET similar to reference current FET 310 of current mirror pixel drive element 300 of FIG. 2C is also required and would operate responsive to Config1 in a manner similar to that previously described with respect to pixel drive circuit 300 of FIG. 2C. In one embodiment, the current source FETs are number 1 through n, wherein n is a positive integer in the approximate range of 20 to 50.

Configuration signal Config1 is asserted onto conductor 354 which is connected to the gate of p-channel switch FET 352 and onto the input of inverter 351. The output of inverter 351 is asserted onto the gate of p-channel switch FET 353 over conductor 355. When Config1 is low, then switch FET 352 is placed in an on state and switch FET 353 is placed in an off state, which connects V_H onto output bus segments 357 a, 357 b and 357 c, thereby asserting V_H onto the gates of current source FETs 361 through 366. This effectively takes current source FETs 361 through 366 out of saturation and insures that no current is asserted onto the drains of current source FETs 361 through 366.

When Config1 is high, then switch FET 352 is placed in an off state and switch FET 353 is placed in an on state, which connects V_(REF) onto output bus segments 357 a, 357 b and 357 c, thereby asserting V_(REF) onto the gates of current source FETs 361 through 366. Since the sources of current source FETs 361 through 366 are connected to V_H bus segments, 356 a, 356 b and 356 c, current source FETs 361 through 366 now replicate the current asserted on their gates. The drains of current source FETs 361 through 366 now assert the replicated current onto current bus segments 359 a, 359 b and 359 c.

V_(REF) is received from another V_(REF) bus on terminal 368. Switch FET 360 receives a signal S_(NEG) from an SRAM memory cell (not shown) forming another part of the pixel drive element over terminal 367. When S_(NEG) is low, switch FET 360 asserts V_(REF) onto V_(REF) bus segments 358 a, 358 b and 358 c.

In summary, circuit 350 is a multiple current source analog to the selectable current source circuit formed by switch FETs 313 and 313 and current source FET 315 of current mirror circuit 300 in FIG. 2C. The same consideration applies to the selectable current source circuit formed by switch FETs 316 and 317 and current source FET 318 of current mirror circuit 300 in FIG. 2C.

In one embodiment, current source circuit is formed as non-selectable by removing connections 354 and 355, removing FET 352 and inverter 351 and replacing switch FET 353 with a conductor directly connecting bus 357 a to V_(REF) bus 358 a. In this manner, modified circuit 350 becomes a direct counterpart to always on current source FET 320 of current mirror circuit 300 in FIG. 2C.

The number of current source FETs forming a circuit such as current mirror segment 350 depends on the total current desired for each pixel drive element. In normal practice, the W and L dimensions of each reference current FET are duplicated in each current source FET. When more current is needed than the current source FET provides, the W dimension of the current source FET can be enlarged. In practice, a FET of width dimension 2 W and length dimension L is equivalent to two FETs in parallel, each of width dimension W and length dimension L. This permits a significant level of design efficiency improvement because the reference current FET and the current source FETs are duplicates of each other. In present invention, up to 30 current source FETs are envisioned for each reference current FET.

Other dimensional considerations are also important. Any of the forgoing FETs identified as switch FETs may be designed using minimum dimensions practical for the required voltage and current of the process. At very high current levels, reference current and current source FETs must be designed with care. While large L devices can be used up to certain levels of current, at some undetermined point it becomes advantageous to use shorter L devices to avoid the heat buildup that accompanies large L devices. In the present invention, the dimensions of the reference current and current source FETs is envisioned to be 30% to 50% greater than the minimum dimensions mentioned above. In one embodiment, the current reference FETs may have a W/L ratio on the order of 15:1 with the L dimension set at approximately twice the minimum dimension.

Calculation of the average or effective threshold voltage of a circuit with multiple current sources in parallel is a root-mean-square calculation rather than the arithmetic mean. The calculation is only a rough estimate because of all the process variables that may be present in an array of current source FETs belonging to a single pixel drive circuit. The applicable RMS formula without weighting of the individual terms follows.

Xrms=√{square root over (Σ_(i=1) ^(i=n)Xi²/n)} where i=1 to n, n being the number of parallel current source FETs and Xi being the threshold voltages of the individual parallel current source FETs.

FIGS. 3A, 3B, 3C and 3D present an exploration of the relationship between a logical circuit, its schematic circuit and its physical implementation.

FIG. 3A presents a logical drawing 381 of a simple CMOS inverter circuit 38 s. CMOS inverter 382 comprises terminal 387 over which a voltage, such a V_(DD), is asserted onto inverter 382 and terminal 388 over which a voltage, such as V_(SS), is asserted onto inverter 382. The main requirement is that the voltage asserted on terminal 387 must be greater than the voltage asserted on terminal 388 by a certain level determined by the specifics of design. An input voltage to inverter 382 is asserted over conductor 383 onto input terminals 385 and 386, and an output voltage equal to one of the voltages asserted on terminal 387 and 388 is asserted onto output terminal 384.

In a simple implementation, the voltage asserted onto conductor 383 is one of the voltages asserted onto terminal 387 and terminal 388. If the voltage asserted onto conductor 387 is V_(DD) and the voltage asserted onto conductor 388 is V_(SS), then if the voltage asserted onto conductor 383 is V_(DD), then the output asserted onto output terminal 384 will be V_(SS). In like manner, if the voltage asserted onto conductor 383 is V_(SS), then the output asserted onto terminal 384 will be V_(DD). This is the origin of the term inverter.

Of course, the voltage asserted onto conductor 383 need not be V_(DD) or V_(SS), just as the voltage asserted onto terminal 387 need not be V_(DD) and the voltage asserted on terminal 388 need not be V_(SS) as long as the earlier restriction is maintained.

FIG. 3B presents a schematic circuit diagram 390 of a simple CMOS inverter such as logical drawing 381 of FIG. 3A. Schematic diagram 390 comprises p-channel FET 391 and n-channel FET 397 configured with the source of p-channel FET 391 connected to V_(DD) over conductor 393 and the source of n-channel FET 397 connected to V_(SS) over conductor 394. The input signal is connected over conductor 395 to the gate of p-channel FET 391 and to the gate of n-channel FET 397. The drains of p-channel FET 391 and n-channel FET 397 are connected to each other and to output conductor 396.

When the input signal asserted over conductor 395 is low, nominally V_(SS), the signal asserted on the gate of p-channel FET 391 is low and the signal asserted on the gate of n-channel FET 397 is low. This effectively shuts off n-channel FET 397, which does not conduct, and causes p-channel FET 391 to conduct, thereby asserting V_(DD) found on its source onto its drain and thereby onto output conductor 396.

When the input signal asserted over conductor 395 is high, nominally V_(DD), the signal asserted on the gate of p-channel FET 391 is high, effectively shutting it off, and the signal asserted on the gate of n-channel FET 397 is high, effectively turning it on. In this case, the voltage V_(SS) found on its source is effectively asserted on its drain and thereby onto output conductor 395. Thus the actions attributable to schematic circuit diagram 390 are identical to those of the presumptive model 381 of FIG. 3A.

FIGS. 3C and 3D depict side and overhead views of a physical implementation 400 of inverter schematic circuit diagram 390 when realized in a typical CMOS substrate. FIGS. 3C and 3D are based on FIG. 6-7b and FIG. 6-7c of Modern Semiconductor Device for Integrated Circuits, Chenming Hu, pp. 217-218 (print version), pp 199-200 (online version), Pearson Education, New Jersey, 2010, hereafter CHENMING HU. Applicant notes that the side view of FIG. 3C is not precisely a side view of the planar view of FIG. 3D. Nevertheless, the primary features are present in both and the difference does not distract from the exposition of the relationship between the primary features.

Side view and top view of physical implementation 400 in FIG. 3C and FIG. 3D comprise p-substrate 401, n-well 402, p-substrate bias implant 403, n-well bias implant 408, a p-channel FET comprising source 407, gate 414 and drain 406, and an n-channel FET comprising source 404, gate 413 and drain 405. Drain 405 of the n-channel FET and drain 406 of the p-channel FET are tied together and form an output at terminal 410.

V_(SS) (0 volts) is asserted over terminal 409 onto p-substrate bias implant 403 and onto n-channel FET source 404. V_(DD) is asserted over terminal 411 onto n-well bias implant and onto p-channel FET source 407. Gate 413 of the n-channel FET is tied to gate 414 of the p-channel FET at input terminal 412, which serves as the point where the input voltage of physical implementation 403 is asserted.

The behavior of inverter physical implementation 400 presented in FIGS. 3C and 3D will necessarily replicate the behavior of schematic 390 of FIG. 3B since the primary components are present and are interconnected in identical fashions.

FIG. 3D is particularly important because it reveals something of the relative planar size, topology and interconnect technology of a typical CMOS layout design. While inherently not to scale, the drawing does call attention to several known characteristics that must be taken into account.

The first is that vias are all normally of the same size. This permits all vias associated with a given layer to be fabricated through the same mask, which is a design efficiency improvement. Not shown is the use of silicidation with a silicide material such as IiSi₂ to improve conductivity around the source, gate and drain of a FET. In some instances more than one via may be needed, although silicidation may reduce the total number of vias required.

Reviewing FIG. 3D, applicant calls attention to the relative size of the p-channel FET formed in n-well 402 and the n-channel FET formed at the bottom of the drawing. P-substrate 401 is not depicted but lies under all depicted components of FIG. 3D as is clear from FIG. 3C. The p-channel FET in n-well 402 is depicted as roughly twice the size of n-channel FET below, as evidenced by six vias 415 (one indicated) above to three below. This is an artifact of the relative weakness of p-channel FETs to n-channel FETs. In order to compensate for this, the p-channel FET is made larger. A common rule of thumb not well attested to is that the length of the channel of a p-channel FET for a circuit of this type is in the range of 1.7 to 3 times the length of the channel of an n-channel FET.

There is a body of work within the semiconductor design literature devoted to the need to match properties of CMOS transistors. One early paper, Matching Properties of MOS Transistors, Pelgrom, et al, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, Vol. 24, No. 5, pp. 1411-1440, October 1989 (hereafter PELGROM), is often cited as authoritative, although subsequent authors have taken issue with a number of the conclusions of PELGROM, especially as applied to submicron processes now common rather than the 2.25 micron process of PELGROM. See, for example, A Comprehensive MOSFET Mismatch Model, Drennan et al, IEEE International Electronic Device Meeting, pp. 167-170, December 1999 (hereafter DRENNAN) which calls attention to a number of points that the authors find inadequate or incorrect in PELGROM. The authors seek to improve on PELGROM through additional experimentation coupled with modeling and conclude that the 1/WL mismatch model of PELGROM can be improved on by various variations of 1/WL, comprising 1/L², 1/WL², 1/W², and 1/LW², selected according to the individual component of mismatch.

A short list of process parameters that affect important performance measures such as threshold voltage V_(T) is found in Digital Integrated Circuits—A Design Perspective, RABAEY et al, Pearson, Pearson Education, page 122, 2002. Variation in threshold voltage V_(T) may be attributed to differences in oxide thickness, substrate, polysilicon and implant impurity levels and the surface charge. Similarly, variation in transconductance V′ is primarily influenced by oxide thickness with secondary influence from electron mobility.

One important aspect of FET performance is the bias voltage applied to the substrate or well in which the FET is placed. The present examples are based on a p-substrate with n-wells formed thereon. The p-substrate is normally biased to V_(SS) and the n-wells are normally biased to V_(DD). P-channel FETs are placed in n-wells and n-channel FETs are placed in p-substrates, although a p-well may be used when the wafer is an n-substrate.

In the examples of FIGS. 2C and 2D, the number of p-channel pixels occupying a pixel drive circuit are on the order of 125 while the number of n-channel FETs occupying a pixel driver circuit is approximately 10. Ninety of the p-channel FETs are large W FETs with an aspect ratio of W over L in the range of 15:1 to 20:1. One of the n-channel FETs is a very large L n-channel FET used to for the reference voltage for the current mirror circuits. Based on the above numbers, the area that must be formed into an n-well is will likely need to be significantly larger than the area for p-substrate within each pixel.

The implication of this is that the physical layout of the pixel circuit must be carefully considered to insure that as many p-channel FETs are placed in the same n-well as possible. The benefits of this include the fact that having a similar bias in a common well on a collection of approximately similar field effect transistors will reduce the possibility that at least one variable that cause differences in the threshold voltage V_(T) of the approximately similar transistors. Approximately similar in this case indicates that a group of transistors are in the same layer in the same portion of the substrate or the same portion of a well and have approximately the same physical W and L dimensions and approximately the same effective W and L dimensions.

One important design consideration for both wells and substrates is the recognized need to provide bias as equally as possible across the entire well or substrate. It is especially important to avoid resistive pats along the contacts. One accepted means for accomplishing this is to provide numerous contacts between the supply voltage bus and the substrate or well. The voltage level to which a well or substrate is biased has bearing on the effective threshold voltage and on-state response time of FETs located within that well or substrate. For the current invention, the bias level for a p-substrate is nominally V_(SS) and the bias level for an n-well is nominally V_(DD) or V_(DDAR) (V_(DD) for the array.) Other schemes may be preferred in different circumstances. There are no forward or reverse biases involved and V_(T) is unmodified.

It is also desirable to match the source to gate voltages V_(GS) of the current source FETs of an individual pixel drive circuit. The voltage on the source of a current source FET is in a path that must carry considerable current when operated in an on state, while the voltage on the gate of a current source FET is mainly used to control the resistive state of the current source FET that enables the FET to act as a current source, which requires only negligible current flow. As a result, it is useful that the source voltage is supplied over a metal conductor, such as aluminum, while the gate voltage may be supplied over a material of higher resistance, such as polysilicon.

FIG. 4A depicts an assemblage of pixel drive circuits 370 comprising four pixel circuit outlines 376, 377, 378 and 379 sharing common n-well 380 formed on p-substrate 371. Using pixel circuit 376 as base, pixel circuit 377 is the mirror of pixel circuit 376 about a vertical axis; pixel circuit 378 is the mirror of pixel circuit 376 about a horizontal axis, and pixel circuit 379 is the mirror of pixel circuit 377 about a horizontal axis, which is equivalent to being a mirror of pixel circuit 378 about a vertical axis. Use of such mirroring is common in two dimensional circuit design, which may be applied at different levels.

Assemblage of pixel drive circuits 370 further comprises a plurality of V_(SS) buses 372 and a plurality of V_(DDAR) buses 373. V_(SS) buses 372 each connect to p-substrate 371 through a plurality of contacts 374. One of three contacts 374 is depicted in each of pixel 376, 377, 378 and 379. The plurality of contacts assures a lower resistance contact structure and a more even distribution of voltage V_(SS) in the substrate. V_(DDAR) buses 373 each connect to n-well 380 through a plurality of contacts 375. One of three contacts 375 is depicted in each of pixel 376, 377, 378 and 379. The plurality of contacts assures a lower resistance contact structure and a more even distribution of voltage V_(DDAR) in the substrate. The use of silicidation with materials such as TiSi₂ may reduce the number of vias required to lower the resistance to an adequate level.

FIG. 4B depicts semiconductor backplane 425 comprising p-substrate 426, n-wells 428 a, 428 b, 428 c and 428 d, and array of pixel drive circuits 427. N-wells 428 a, 428 b, 428 c and 428 d extend across the entire width of array of pixel drive circuits 427. The vertical size of the n-wells is substantially exaggerated to ensure clarity. Each of n-wells 428 a, 428 b, 428 c and 428 d are connected to V_(DDAR) over a series of buses (not shown) with a plurality of contacts (not shown) as described for assemblage 370 of FIG. 4A. The horizontal ends of n-well 428 a, 428 b, 428 c and 428 d extend beyond the edges of array of pixel circuits 427 in order to minimize any edge effects that may occur near the ends of an n-well due to the projection nature of photomasks used to print integrated circuits.

FIG. 4C presents an expanded section 430 after backplane 425 of FIG. 4B. Expanded section 430 comprises p-substrate 431, displayed in three sections, n-well 432 a and n-well 432 b. N-well 432 a and n-well 432 b represent small segments of n-wells that span the entire width of an array of pixel drive elements after n-wells 428 a, 428 b, 428 c and 428 d of FIG. 4B. N-wells 432 a and 432 b are formed separately but using substantially identical process steps on p-substrate 431. N-well 432 a and n-well 432 b are each connected to a bus (not shown) biased to V_(DDAR) over a plurality of contacts 435 (two of 36 indicated.) P-substrate 431 connects to a bus (not shown) biased to V_(SS) over a plurality of contacts 434 (3 of 27 indicated.)

Expanded section 430 comprises an array of pixel drive circuits two rows high and three columns wide. Row 0 (zero) comprises pixel drive circuits 433 (0,0), 433 (0,1), and 433 (0,2), which share n-well 432 a. Row 1 comprises pixel drive circuits 433 (1,0), 433 (1,1), and 433 (1,2), which share n-well 432 b.

Column 0 (zero) comprises pixel drive circuits 433 (0,0) and 433 (1,0); column 1 comprises pixel drive circuits 433 (0,1) and 433 (1,1); and column 2 comprises pixel drive circuits 433 (0,2) and 433 (1,2). Each pixel drive circuit of each column occupies an n-well not shared with other pixel drive circuits of the same column.

The issue remains one of process variance. Placing two or more substantially identically designed FETs in a common n-well will in general tend to cause those FETs to exhibit similar performance. The example of FIG. 4A presents a way of providing a common n-well to four adjacent pixel drive circuits forming a 2 by 2 array. The examples of FIGS. 4B and 4C provides a second way of providing a common n-well to a linear array of pixel drive circuits. Both approaches afford an opportunity to match the threshold voltages of a number of FETs that are designed to have substantially the same physical configuration.

FIG. 4D depicts a hybrid illustration of a single pixel drive circuit 500 a substantially identical to the pixel drive circuit 500 of FIG. 2D. Two dashed lines 550 u and 5501 have been added to indicate the upper limit 550 u and the lower limit 5501 of an n-well of the type previously described. The side to side bounds of the n-well are not defined for this example. All FETs between upper limit 550 u and lower limit 5501 are p-channel FETs that would need to be created in an n-well placed on a p-substrate in a CMOS process.

One aspect in common to all the previously described n-well variations is a need to insure that the n-well is biased to a common voltage. A conductor of the lowest available resistance extending along substantially all of the n-well can be used together with multiple attachment points to the bus supplying the bias voltage to insure that the n-well has a substantially identical bias voltage at all points.

There are other approaches that can result in a reduction in the effects of threshold voltage variance across a group of parallel current source FETs. In many applications, a large L n-channel FET is operated as a voltage selectable resistor in which the voltage applied to the gate of the large L n-channel FET. There is a linear current range between the threshold voltage V_(T) of the large L n-channel FET and the voltage V_(DSAT) at which the current output I_(D) becomes saturated. This is also known as the triode range in some texts. It is a common practice to confine operation of a large L n-channel FET to this linear range through the selection of V_(BIAS), but it can also be operated in saturation provided the current available there satisfies the overall design requirements, V_(DSAT) is also variously defined, with some sources stating that it is the point at which the current curve bends over and other stating that it is the point at which the current curve reaches 90% of its peak value. Either is acceptable.

There is an advantage that accrues in being able to operate a large L n-channel bias FET in saturation. A similar advantage may accrue to p-channel FETs or n-channel FETs of more conventional dimensions.

FIG. 5A presents a plot of the current output I_(D) of an n-channel FET as a function of the gate to source voltage V_(GS). In the region marked cutoff the voltage is below the threshold voltage required for current to flow through the FET, defined as V_(GS)<V_(TH). The family of curves to the right of the vertical line at V_(TH) represent the voltages in the linear or triode range.

FIG. 5B presents a plot of the output current I_(D) of an n-channel FET as a function of the drain to source voltage V_(DS). No threshold region is shown because V_(DS)=0 until V_(DS)≥V_(TH). The triode or linear region lies to the left of the dotted line representing the transition point from the linear region to the saturation region and the region to the right of the dotted line is the saturation region. The point at which the curve transitions from linear to saturation is the saturation voltage of V_(DS) or V_(DSAT).

The greatest concern for parallel current sources is variance in the threshold voltage V_(T) across the range of parallel devices These occur even under the best of circumstances, although the steps taken to minimize the effect will somewhat effective in controlling the variance. Nevertheless, once the device is manufactured in silicon, the variance is fixed and other steps must be considered to decrease the relevance of the variance.

The equation for I_(D) as a function of gate to source voltage and threshold voltage follows:

$I_{D} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {V_{GS} - V_{TH}} \right)^{2}}$

Where μ_(n) represents the charge carrier effective mobility, C_(ox) represents the gate oxide capacitance per unit area and W and L represent the effective width and length of the gate. The ratio of width to length is inversely proportional to the resistance of the gate, so doubling W reducing the resistance R by half. V_(GS) and V_(TH) are previously defined.

This equation is simplified for this example. The dominant variables in the equation are V_(GS) and V_(TH), and variations in V_(TH) are the matter of concern. One analysis of the problem of variance in V_(TH) relies on the value of V_(GS) relative to V_(TH). A way of expressing this is:

I _(D)∝((V _(GS) −V _(TH))², also presented as ΔV _(GS) ², where ΔV _(GS) =V _(GS) −V _(TH)

Which means that the current is proportional to the square of the difference between the gate to source voltage and the threshold voltage. The other variables are minor effects compared to this.

In the ensuing text, the n-channel FET will be assumed to be operating in saturation, as noted in FIG. 5B. The point at which VGS causes the FET to enter saturation is termed V_(DS_SAT) where

V _(DS) ≥V _(GS-V) _(TH)

V_(DS) is defined as the drain to source voltage. In this region the drain current of the n-channel FET is a weak function of the drain voltage in the operating region of interest. When operating with the condition

V _(DS) <V _(GS-V) _(TH)

The drain current of the n-channel FET is a strong function of the drain to source voltage, and the FET is said to be operating in the triode or linear region. In this region, the n-channel FET operates as a voltage controlled diode. This application will concentrate on operation in saturation.

In order to operate the n-channel FET in saturation, the V_(DS) drain to source voltage must always exceed the voltage where the FET transitions to the saturation region. If it is desired to operate in saturation at a voltage lower than the transition region, then the design of the n-channel FET has to be changed. Looking at the equation for drain current

$I_{D} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {V_{GS} - V_{TH}} \right)^{2}}$

This can be rewritten as

$I_{D} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {\Delta\; V_{GS}} \right)^{2}}$

as previously noted, which becomes

$I_{D} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( V_{DS_{-}SAT} \right)^{2}}$

at the point where the n-channel FET enters the saturation range.

Reordering the equation to solve for W/L, the equation now becomes

$\frac{W}{L} = {{I_{D}/\left( V_{DS_{SAT}}^{2} \right)}\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}}$

For the next step, an evaluation is made of the W/L formula at two different V_(DS SAT) points, denoted as V_(DS SAT1) and V_(DS_SAT_2), where both are at the same I_(D) current value. The individual ratios are denoted as WL_(RATIO1) and WL_(RATIO2) for V_(DS SAT1) and V_(DS SAT2) respectively. Taking the ratio WL_(RATIO) of WL_(RATIO1) and WL_(RATIO2) yields

${WL_{RATIO}} = {\left( \frac{I_{D}}{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}V_{{DS}\mspace{14mu}{SAT}\; 1}^{2}} \right)/\left( \frac{I_{D}}{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}V_{{DS}\mspace{14mu}{SAT}\; 2}^{2}1} \right)}$

Simplifying the equation by removing common factors and reordering the remaining factors yields

${WL_{RATIO}} = {\frac{V_{{DS}\mspace{14mu}{SAT}\; 2}^{2}}{V_{{DS}\mspace{14mu}{SAT}\; 1}^{2}} = \left( \frac{V_{{DS}\mspace{14mu}{SAT}\; 2}}{V_{{DS}\mspace{14mu}{SAT}\; 1}} \right)^{2}}$

Let V_(DS SATR) equal the ratio of V_(DS SAT2) divided by V_(DS SAT1), then

WL _(RATIO) =V _(DS SATR) ²

Going back to the definition of WL_(RATIO), where WL_(RATIO)=WL_(RATIO1)/WL_(RATIO2), it is possible now to solve for WL_(RATIO2) as a function of WL_(RATIO1) and V_(DS SATR).

WL _(RATIO2) =WL _(RATIO1) /V _(DS SATR) ²

Analyzing the consequence of this reveals that if the goal is to reduce the required V_(DS SAT2) voltage by a factor of 2 from V_(DS SAT1), then the WL_(RATIO2), the effective width of the FET, must be increased by a factor of 4 over WL_(RATIO1). A calculation behind this follows.

${WL}_{{RATIO}2} = {\frac{{WL}_{{RATIO}1}}{0.5^{2}} = {4{WL}_{{RATIO}1}}}$

This establishes the possibility that sensitivity to V_(TH) variations can be controlled by manipulating the W/L ratio.

As previously noted, the threshold voltages of FETs are somewhat variable even within elements of the same subcircuit. The mechanisms include local gate oxide thickness, local implant concentrations, local device dimensional variations, local thermal effects and many other effects. These effects can cause variations in V_(T) for similar FETs operating in current source circuits in an ensemble of current sources on the same silicon dice. Note that the W/L ratio of C1 may be achieved by 25 parallel 1/1 devices after condition C2 as well as by a single device of 25/1 W/L ratio.

The following text examines sensitivity to V_(T) variations at two bias conditions C1 and C2.

Condition → C1 C2 V_(T) 0.8 v 0.8 v V_(GS) 1.0 v 1.8 v ΔV_(GS) 0.2 v 1.0 v W/L 25/1 1/1 Condition → C1 C2 V_(DS SAT) 0.2 v 1.0 v I_(D) (1/2)μ_(n)C_(OX) 1/2)μ_(n)C_(OX)

${{Use}\mspace{14mu}{the}\mspace{14mu}{baseline}\mspace{14mu}{equation}\mspace{14mu} I_{D}} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {V_{GS} - V_{TH}} \right)^{2}}$

${{{{For}\mspace{14mu}{condition}\mspace{14mu}{C1}},{I_{D} =}}\quad}{\quad{{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}{C_{OX}\left( \frac{25}{1} \right)}\left( {1.0 - 0.8} \right)^{2}} = {{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}25(0.2)(0.2)} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}}}}}$

${{{{For}\mspace{14mu}{condition}\mspace{14mu}{C2}},{I_{D} =}}\quad}{\quad{{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}{C_{OX}\left( \frac{1}{1} \right)}\left( {1.8 - 0.8} \right)^{2}} = {{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}1(1.0)(1.0)} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}}}}}$

To differentiate the baseline equation above with respect to V_(TH), first expand the term in parentheses.

${I_{D} = {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {{V_{GS}}^{2} + {V_{TH}}^{2} - {2V_{GD}V_{TH}}} \right)}},$

and then modify the groupings

${I_{D} = {{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {V_{GS}}^{2} \right)} + {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}{V_{TH}}^{2}} - {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}2V_{GS}V_{TH}}}},$

again modifying the groupings

${I_{D} = {{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}{V_{GS}}^{2}} + {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}\left( {{V_{TH}}^{2} - {2V_{GS}V_{TH}}} \right)}}},$

now differentiating with respect to V_(TH).

$\frac{{dI}_{D}}{{dV}_{TH}} = {0 + {2\left( {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}\left( {V_{TH} - V_{GS}} \right)} \right)}}$

The first term does not contain V_(TH) and differentiates to 0. The second term differentiates to a term comprising the difference between V_(GS) and V_(TH), which may be rewritten as

${\frac{{dI}_{D}}{{dV}_{TH}} = {2\left( {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}\left( {- \left( {V_{GD} - V_{TH}} \right)} \right)} \right)}},$

which may alternatively be written as

$\frac{{dI}_{D}}{{dV}_{TH}} = {2\left( {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}\left( {- {\Delta V}_{GS}} \right)} \right)}$

Next the baseline equation is differentiated with respect to V_(GS). Starting with the intermediate grouping from above.

${I_{D} = {{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {V_{GS}}^{2} \right)} + {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}{V_{TH}}^{2}} - {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}2V_{GS}V_{TH}}}},$

which may be reordered as

$I_{D} = {{\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{ox}\frac{W}{L}\left( {{V_{GS}}^{2} - {2V_{GS}V_{TH}}} \right)} + {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}{{V_{TH}}^{2}.}}}$

Taking the differential with respect to V_(GS) yields.

${\frac{{dI}_{D}}{{dV}_{GS}} = {{2\left( {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}\left( {V_{GS} - V_{TH}} \right)} \right)} + 0}},$

which may also be written as

$\frac{{dI}_{D}}{{dV}_{GS}} = {2\left( {\frac{1}{2}\mu_{n}C_{OX}\frac{W}{L}\left( {\Delta V}_{GS} \right)} \right)}$

By inspection, the two derived differentials are closely related, differing only in sign, as expected. The remainder of this exposition will concentrate on the differential of I_(D) with respect to V_(TH).

The previously presented table disclosing conditions C1 and C2 is repeated here for use as an example for analysis and evaluation. The constant ½μ_(n)C_(OX) used in the above equations is replaced by the letter A to simplify the interpreting of the results. Note that this is also the drain current I_(D) for this example. The revised equation follows.

$\frac{{dI}_{D}}{{dV}_{GS}} = {2\left( {A\frac{W}{L}\left( {\Delta V}_{GS} \right)} \right)}$

The completed table is presented below.

Condition → C1 C2 V_(T) 0.8 v 0.8 v V_(GS) 1.0 v 1.8 v ΔV_(GS) 0.2 v 1.0 v W/L 25/1 1/1 Condition → C1 C2 V_(DS SAT) 0.2 v 1.0 v I_(D) (1/2)μ_(n)C_(OX) = A (1/2)μ_(n)C_(OX) = A $\frac{{dI}_{D}}{dV_{TH}}$ 10A 2A

The two conditions have identical outcomes. This is by design and is typical of a current mirror circuit wherein the ratio of reference current FET width dimension to current source FET width dimension is unchanged between different implementations.

The results indicate that when the number of parallel current sources is increased, the slope of the change with respect to threshold voltage V_(TH) increases. Also note that the voltage range ΔV_(GS) is greater with fewer parallel current sources, which places the FET further in saturation. This indicates that a current source where uniformity with respect to threshold voltage is desired should use as few parallel devices as possible while achieving the desired current and voltage. By inspection it is obvious that intermediate W/L conditions will fall between the two differential condition results. Following previous statements, the intermediate W/L conditions may be achieved through the use of a multiple number of W/L dimensioned FETs identical to a 1/1 dimensioned FET linked in parallel. The number of parallel FETs is determined by current and voltage requirements, as each FET will ultimately have currency density limits.

Knowledge of this allows informed design decisions to be made. The tradeoff is to be made between a higher level of threshold voltage uniformity resulting from process variations that requires higher current density, which may adversely affect product lifetime in a number of ways, or a lower level of threshold voltages that requires lower current density, thereby improving the likely product lifetime. The product lifetime may be affected by the Joule effect (heating), electromigration effect (connection erosion resulting in a circuit break) and the slow diffusion effect (aging.) The choice of which is more important is a product design consideration and may require significant interaction between the design staff and the product staff. The present disclosure offers a path by which the consequences of this decision can be adjusted for electronically after the product is in prototyping, evaluation or production phases.

Those with experience of the art will recognize alternative implementations and variations that may be implemented using the disclosure of this invention. All are encompassed within the present disclosure. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A plurality of pixel drive circuits forming part of an array of emissive elements, wherein the plurality of pixel drive circuits are disposed to form a plurality of rows and a plurality of columns, and wherein the plurality of pixel drive circuits are organized into sets of pixel drive circuits, each set comprising at least one pixel drive circuit, and wherein a FET of a set of pixel drive circuits shares a common well with other FETs of similar function in the same set of pixel drive circuits positioned therein, such that the variance of the threshold voltages of those FETs is substantially reduced, and wherein each of the pixel drive circuits comprises a circuit operative to deliver a current at a predetermined voltage to an emissive device and a memory circuit operative to receive modulation data and to use same to modulate the current output of the pixel drive circuit.
 2. The plurality of pixel drive circuits of claim 1, wherein the common well is shared among a m columns by n rows set of pixel drive circuits, m comprising an integer greater than one and n comprising an integer equal to or greater than one.
 3. The plurality of pixel drive circuits of claim 2, wherein the number of rows is greater than one.
 4. The plurality of pixel drive circuits of claim 1, wherein the number of pixel drive circuits in a set of pixel drive circuits is a plurality and the common well of a set of pixel drive circuits occupies part of at least one row of pixel drive circuits.
 5. The plurality of pixel drive circuits of claim 4, wherein the common well occupying part of at least one row of pixel drive elements occupies a contiguous part of an adjacent row of pixel drive elements.
 6. The plurality of pixel drive circuits of claim 1, wherein the common well is an n-well and the FETs located therein are p-channel FETs.
 7. The plurality of pixel drive circuits of claim 1, wherein the common well is a p-well and the FETs located therein are n-channel FETs.
 8. The plurality of pixel drive circuits of claim 1, wherein the common well is biased to a common supply voltage over a plurality of contacts. 